By Abubakar Umar
There are good reasons why Nigerians should take more than a passing interest in the controversy generated by the actions of members of the Senate Committee on Customs, Excise and Tariffs and that of the Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA). If the reports in the media are true, the matter goes beyond the victimisation of one organ of government by another. It is a possibility that members of the National Assembly might be on a mission to crash the Federal Government’s war against corruption using the power of ‘oversight’ as cover. Two recent incidents would serve to illustrate the danger.
Sometime in October/November, 2016, a rice trading company,
Master Energy Commodities Trading Limited, imported
into Nigeria 1,200 metric tons of rice in 30, 40-foot containers. In their
attempt to evade paying the correct custom duties, they declared the ‘rice’ consignment as ‘yeast.’ The goods
were later intercepted and seized on the orders of the Controller-General of
Customs (CGC), Col. Hamid Ali (rtd). Unfortunately, this seemingly patriotic
action by a public officer was
seen as an affront to one
senior member of the National Assembly. A Senator, the leader of the Senate
Committee on Customs, Excise & Tariff, wrote the CGC demanding that the
consignment be released forthwith, on the dubious claim that he had
investigated the matter and had found the importer blameless. His findings?
That it was the clearing agent not the importer that called the goods ‘yeast’
instead of ‘rice’!
The CGC brushed aside this incredible story; as any right thinking person would
do. But to the shock of many Nigerians, all hell broke loose. The Senate
Committee then summoned the CGC to appear before them in uniform, seeing that
as a retired Army colonel, he had refrained from wearing the Customs uniform.
He was also directed to answer a long list of queries by this same angry panel.
In the end, he was dragged before the Senate at plenary, put through a cruel
inquisition, publicly humiliated and dismissed as “not fit to hold public
office.”
Fast-forward to last week. This time, a dubious scheme was uncovered
in which a subsidiary company of the NPA went into a joint venture with a
private company to manage the Calabar Port. Both the NPA subsidiary, called
Calabar Channel Management, and the private company, Niger Global Engineering
& Technical Company Limited, were incorporated together in 2014 just for
this deal. The purported JV partner was then awarded a contract to dredge the
Calabar channel, a contract the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPE) was to
condemn as violating all due processes. This did not discourage them from
demanding and getting a whopping US$12.5 million upfront payment from the NPA,
or asking for a purported balance of US$22 million.
In the meantime, a rash of petitions and reports had
inundated the NPA against this contract, with many alleging it to be a bogus
scam to siphon public funds. BPE was the first to cry out, saying both the
award of the dredging contract and the initial payment of over N4 billion to
Messrs Niger Global Engineering & Technical Company Limited were done
in violation of the law. Even worse, all efforts of the new management of the
NPA under Ms. Hadiza Bala Usman to find evidence of the dredging work purported
to have been done in the Calabar channel at the time the company claimed to
have done so were unsuccessful.
That is not all. There was also the report by a consultant
that advised against a joint venture partnership for the purpose of managing
the Calabar Port. Their reason was simply that maritime activities in the
Calabar Port were too low, and that a joint venture scheme as obtained in Lagos
and Bony was unsustainable.
Faced with these negative outcomes, the NPA management
decided that national interest would be better served if the JV scheme, as well
as the so-called dredging project are terminated. On its part, the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission
(EFCC) has moved in with a mission to “recover public funds collected for job
not done.”
Now, the name of the person driving this scheme is quite
instructive going by the very loud and sustained counter attacks being mounted
against the public officers; officers that insist that right things are done.
He is the leader of the Senate Committee on Customs, Excise and Tariff. He is
the owner of both the Niger Global Engineering & Technical Company Limited as
well as the rice smuggling giant, Master Energy Commodities Trading Limited.
Nigerians must not leave the likes of Hamid Ali, Ibrahim
Magu, Hadiza Bala Usman, (former BPP DG) Emeka Nzeh et al at the mercy of these strange law makers;
politicians that have demonstrated time and again that they are in politics to
serve themselves and themselves alone.
The experience of Hadiza Usman, the new MD of the NPA, is
particularly sad. The more she tries to fight to reduce graft and perfidy, the
more determined they seem to mobilise against her, to neutralise her and see
her back. They want her out because, they now claim, she is ‘too young’ to
manage a complex organisation such as NPA – even though she is past 40 years of
age. Unashamed, they question the wisdom of appointing a woman to such a post –
her training and experience counting for nothing; apparently.
Incidents such as these are the reason the Nigerian public
feels let down by our Parliament. They are the reasons why a whole lot of
Nigerians take a dim view of members of the National Assembly. Some even
believe the conduct of our legislators is a major factor holding Nigeria down;
why it is a laughing stock
among the nations of the world.
It is the duty of all Nigerians to demand correct conduct
from all public officials, including from members of the National Assembly,
especially the Senate. Senator Bukola Saraki, the Senate President, must enforce discipline among his
colleagues. No member of a committee, much less a Chairman, should remain in
his duty post once credible information about possible crime is received on the
person. We need not remind our political leaders, most of all our legislators,
that punishment always follow excess.
Credit: Abubakar Umar, former governor of Kaduna State
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